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The Effects of Magnetic Forces on Plant Growth

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Title: The Effects of Magnetic Forces on Plant Growth


1
The Effects of Magnetic Forces on Plant Growth
  • Robert Furatero
  • Bio 10 (6)

2
Question and Hypothesis
  • My original question that I originally came up
    for this project was Do magnetic forces affect
    plant growth?
  • To answer this question, I hypothesized that
    plant growth would be affected by magnets.
    Furthermore, I hypothesized that the roots would
    be repelled by magnetic forces.

3
Background Information
  • The influence of the geomagnetic field on the
    growth of plants was first realized in 1862 by
    Louis Pasteur. During his experiments on
    fermentation, he discovered that the Earths
    magnetic field had a stimulating effect on
    plants growth processes.
  • Father of modern bio-magnetics Dr. Albert Roy
    Davies received a patent in 1950 for magnetically
    treating seeds to stimulate plant growth.
  • Magnetic forces are used in some areas today in
    agriculture (such as Mundimex Inc., or the
    country of Israel) primarily to stimulate and
    enhance plant growth.

4
More Background Information
Starch grains can be seen in plant cells as black
dots
  • Plant roots contain starch molecules. These
    starch molecules (along with heavy fluid exerted
    in cells there, known as protoplasm) help the
    plant determine which way to grow (they both
    detect gravity).
  • Starch molecules can be affected by magnetic
    forces via diamagnetism.
  • Diamagnetism is a weak magnetic force present
    when there are other magnetic fields. The weak
    magnetic force repels the other magnetic field.

Magnet focuses a magnetic force which repels
starch. (visual left, conceptual right)
5
Experiment Design
  • In order to check if my hypothesis was correct, I
    decided to create an experiment in which a plant
    grown under the influence of a magnetic force
    would be compared with the growth of the same
    plant without a magnet.
  • I chose to grow string bean seeds for this
    experiment because they grow tall as well as
    quickly.
  • In one pot, I placed a bar magnet on a tilt
    against one side facing upward. The other pot was
    left alone. I then placed the soil and planted a
    few seeds in each pot (because not all seeds grow
    perfectly and for periodic data collections).

6
Experiment Procedure
After One Week
  • To test my hypothesis and gain proper results, I
    made sure that only one variable (the magnet) was
    the only one being changed.
  • I maintained a gave both plants reasonable and
    equal amounts of water at the same daily
    intervals.
  • I also gave both plants an equal amount of
    sunlight (8 hours) by placing both plants under a
    timed lamp. This would also ensure that the plant
    would grow straight up and not tilted towards the
    light source.

After Two Weeks
7
Experiment Results
  • After about two weeks of growing both plants,
    significant differences were found.
  • Both plants were grown at the same time (Nov.
    22), but the magnet plant germinated one day
    before the control plant. Both plants then grew
    at the same rate for about a week. The magnet
    plant then seemed to stop growing a little while
    before the control plant. In the end, the magnet
    plant was about an inch shorter than the control
    plant.

8
Experiment Results
  • After measuring its height above the soil, I
    uprooted both plants to check if the magnet
    affected the roots.
  • The control plants root was an inch long below
    soil level. The magnet plants root was two and a
    half inches long below soil level.
  • The magnet plants root had a bump slightly below
    soil level. The bump was tilted toward the
    magnet. Also, the tiny root hairs were all
    attracted to the magnet. The control plant did
    not have a bump and its root hairs were spread in
    random directions.

9
Experiment Results
10
Data Analysis
  • The data from this experiment shows that the
    magnet attracted the starch molecules found in
    the roots.
  • The data from this experiment also shows that the
    magnet stimulated plant growth due to the fact
    that the magnet plant germinated first.
  • The plants that I grew both died before they
    could reach this day. This might be due to the
    fact that halfway through the experiment time
    span, they were exposed to varying climates.

11
Conclusions
  • After conducting this experiment, I can conclude
    that plants are affected by magnetic forces and
    that some of my hypothesis was correct.
  • However, I can also conclude that half of my
    hypothesis was incorrect. The plant was attracted
    to the magnet, not repelled by it

12
Sources
  • Diamagnetism - Wikipedia, the free
    encyclopedia--http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamagn
    etism
  • Sowing Seeds in a Magnetic Field-http//liftoff.ms
    fc.nasa.gov/news/2003/news-seeds.asp
  • Magnetism in Agriculture--http//www.mundi.com/agr
    ieng3.html
  • Do magnetic fields have an effect on plant
    growth?--http//www.madsci.org/posts/archives/2006
    -08/1156020024.Cb.r.html
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